Essentials of Frostbite Management Webinar
Frostbite is a serious cold-weather injury that can result in permanent tissue damage, disability, or amputation if not recognized and treated promptly. This lecture provides a comprehensive overview of frostbite pathophysiology, field assessment, evidence-based interventions, and current management recommendations. Attendees will learn to differentiate frostbite from other cold-related injuries, identify early warning signs, and apply practical treatment strategies that improve patient outcomes.
Using real-world case examples and up-to-date clinical guidelines, this session covers the full continuum of care—from initial scene evaluation and decisionmaking in austere environments to hospital-based rewarming protocols and long-term follow-up considerations. Emphasis is placed on safe field practices, minimizing secondary injury, and understanding when rapid transport or specialty burn-center consultation is indicated.
Participants will leave equipped with the knowledge and confidence to manage frostbite effectively in both urban and wilderness settings, helping reduce morbidity and enhance patient survival during cold-weather incidents.
Learning Objectives
Identify the different degrees of frostbite
Understand the mechanisms of freezing injury and the stages of frostbite.
Apply evidence-based prehospital treatments, including rewarming, pain management, and protection of injured tissues.
Determine transport priorities and understand indications for specialty burn or trauma center referral.
Understand the rewarming process
Determine when it is appropriate to initiate TPA
Dr. Frederick Endorf, MD
Burn Surgeon
Department of Surgery
Division of GI, Trauma, and Endocrine Surgery
University of Colorado-Anschutz Medical Center
Aurora, CO
Available Credit
- 1.00 Trauma

Facebook
X
LinkedIn
Forward